Last edited by rsteinmetz70112 October 27th, 2020 at 04:38 PM. That will have to wait until I have Windows 7 fully updated and see what else I need to do to actually use the VM, like secure it but maintain some connection to the Internet. I'm sure there will be a round 2 of updates.įor my next trick I'm going to see if I can enable the lpt port pass through in Virtual Box. Starting from version 2.0, VirtualBox supports 32 and 64bit host and guest operating systems (To run 64bit guests, make sure your processor supports. I've now installed Windows 7 64 bit in Virtual Box and it's busy downloading all of the 160 odd Windows 7 updates, about 1.5 GB. I changed "Secure Virtual Machine" to saved and rebooted, this time I have 64 bit options in Virtual Box, I have no idea what happened. 64-bit Ubuntu on VirtualBox Im trying to set up an Ubuntu VB and I dont have a 64-bit OS as an option in the Linux menu when setting up a new machine. I went back into the Motherboard and went through event menu again and still didn't see any other virtualization options. I set is to DISABLED] saved the changes rebooted and I still had only 32 bit options. However, when I go to System Settings -> Details in the guest Ubuntu OS, it says the operating system type is 32-bit, and binary files meant for 64-bit Ubuntu will not run. I still only found the option I listed above. As far as I can tell, Ubuntu installed in VirtualBox (version 4.3.8) correctly and it runs just fine - see attachment Log-1. I opened every menu based on a comment I found about a different motherboard saying the setting was "hidden" in the overclocking menu. Sometimes that's the case, but not always. Then check your BIOS options again and see if the latter option has to be enabled separately from general VT-x. It needs to support both VT-x and VT-x with Extended Page Tables, so verify that. In a effort to be very sure I went back through all of the options to make sure there were no virtualization options hidden in the mother board. Or if you prefer, go to, find your CPU, and check its specs. I have no Windows installed on the computer. I have seen how to enable it in Windows 10. I understood it was a Windows thing not a hardware thing. I'm not sure how to enable Hyper-V on Linux.
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